
Some understanding of the biochemistry of exercise is fundamental to any study of the factors that contribute to sports performance. It is the physical, chemical and biochemical properties of cells and tissues that determine the physiological responses to exercise, and yet the teaching of exercise biochemistry is poorly developed compared with exercise physiology. Where the subject is taught, the student often finds the approach somewhat daunting, with its focus on thermodynamics, chemical structures and metabolic pathways. Many students find the subject difficult, when it should not be so. This book introduces the student of sports science or exercise physiology to the biochemical processes that underpin exercise performance and the adaptations that occur with training. The focus is on skeletal muscle metabolism and the provision of energy for working muscles and the principles of exercise biochemistry are introduced in a context that is immediately relevant to the student of sports science. Instead of the traditional approach of working through the main classes of biomolecules and metabolic pathways, the subject is tackled by considering the biochemical processes involved in energy provision for different sports events and the way in which limitations in energy supply can cause fatigue, and thus limit performance. Recovery from exercise is important for athletes who train and compete with only a limited rest period, and the biochemical processes that influence recovery and restoration of performance capacity are also addressed. The processes fuelling the activities that contribute to sport form the core of this book, together with the changes that occur with training and the role of diet in providing the necessary fuels. But sporting talent is a rare gift, and a brief description of its hereditary basis is included. · A complete introduction to the biochemical basis of sports performance, appealing to undergraduate students, coaches, and athletes · Numerous links
This book investigates the biochemical mechanisms that underpin human exercise performance and the physiological adaptations resulting from training. Authors Michael Gleeson and Ronald J. Maughan, both established experts in exercise physiology, address the common student difficulty with traditional, abstract biochemical teaching. They propose a contextual framework that links metabolic pathways directly to energy provision for specific sports events, fatigue, and recovery.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and educators frequently highlight this text as a bridge between complex biochemical theory and practical sports science application. Readers often note that the prose is accessible for undergraduate students while maintaining the technical rigor required for serious study in exercise physiology.
Page Count:
316
Publication Date:
2010-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191549002
ISBN-13:
9780191549007
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